Economists use production functions to describe how output of a system varies with another variable such as labour or capital. For example, the production function P(L) = 200L + 10L^2 - L^3 goves the output of a system as a function of the number of labourers. The average product A(L) is the average output per labourer when L labourers are working: A(L) = P(L)/L. The marginal product M P (L) is the approximate change in output when one additional labourer is added to L labourers; that is, M P(L) = P'(L) ~ P(L + 1) - P(L).

(a) For the production function P(L) = 200L + 10L^2 - L^3, find the L-value corresponding to maximum average production, and call this value L0. Verify that P'(L0) = A(L0).

(b) Now let P(L) be any general production function (not just the one in part (a)), and suppose that the peak of the average production curve occurs at L = L0, so that A'(L0) = 0. Show that we must have M P(L0) = P'(L0) = A(L0).

P(L) = 200L + 10L^2 - L^3

P'(L) = 200 + 20L - 3L^2

A(L) = 200 + 10L - L^2
A' = 10 - 2L
Max avg P is where L=5 That is L0
A(5) = 200+50-25 = 225

P'(5) = 200 + 100 - 75 = 225 = A(5)

A'(L0) = 0 means (P(L)/L)' = 0 at L0

(P'*L - P)/L^2 = 0
P'*L - P = 0
P' = P/L = A

To find the L-value corresponding to the maximum average production (L0) for the production function P(L) = 200L + 10L^2 - L^3, we need to follow these steps:

(a) First, find the expression for the average product A(L) by dividing the total output (P(L)) by the number of laborers (L):

A(L) = P(L) / L

Substitute the given production function into the equation:

A(L) = (200L + 10L^2 - L^3) / L

Simplify the equation:

A(L) = 200 + 10L - L^2

Next, we need to find the derivative of A(L) with respect to L to find the maximum average production point:

A'(L) = 10 - 2L

Set A'(L) = 0 to find the critical point:

10 - 2L = 0

2L = 10

L = 5

So, L0 = 5 represents the L-value corresponding to the maximum average production for this production function.

To verify that P'(L0) = A(L0), we need to find the marginal product at L = L0:

P'(L0) = P(L0 + 1) - P(L0)

Substitute the production function into the equation:

P'(L0) = (200(L0 + 1) + 10(L0 + 1)^2 - (L0 + 1)^3) - (200L0 + 10L0^2 - L0^3)

Simplify the equation:

P'(L0) = 200 + 10(2L0 + 1) - 3(L0^2 + L0 + 1)

P'(L0) = 200 + 20L0 + 10 - 3L0^2 - 3L0 - 3

P'(L0) = 10 + 17L0 - 3L0^2

Now substitute L0 = 5 into the equation:

P'(L0) = 10 + 17(5) - 3(5^2)

P'(L0) = 10 + 85 - 75

P'(L0) = 20

Now, substitute L0 = 5 into the average product equation:

A(L0) = 200 + 10(5) - (5^2)

A(L0) = 200 + 50 - 25

A(L0) = 225

Therefore, we can verify that P'(L0) = A(L0) = 20 = 225.

(b) Now suppose the peak of the average production curve occurs at L = L0, so that A'(L0) = 0.

We can start by finding the expression for A'(L) by taking the derivative of A(L):

A'(L) = d/dL (P(L)/L) = (P'(L)L - P(L))/L^2

Since A'(L0) = 0, we can write:

(P'(L0)L0 - P(L0))/L0^2 = 0

P'(L0)L0 - P(L0) = 0

Now, to show that M P (L0) = P'(L0) = A(L0), we need to prove that the marginal product (M P(L0)) is equal to P'(L0) and A(L0).

First, let's find the expression for M P(L):

M P(L) = P'(L) ~ P(L + 1) - P(L)

Substitute P(L) = P(L + 1) into the equation:

M P(L) = P'(L) ~ P(L) - P(L) = P'(L)

Therefore, we can conclude that M P(L) = P'(L).

Substituting L0 into the equation:

M P(L0) = P'(L0)

Since we showed earlier that A(L0) = P'(L0), it implies that:

M P(L0) = P'(L0) = A(L0)

So, we have successfully shown that when the peak of the average production curve occurs at L0 and A'(L0) = 0, then M P(L0) = P'(L0) = A(L0).